AMERICA AND AMERICANS AND SELECTED NONFICTION
John Steinbeck, , edited by Susan Shillinglaw and Jackson J. Benson. . Viking, $25.95 (400pp) ISBN 978-0-670-03062-0
Few may remember that the Nobel Prize–winning novelist pursued a parallel 30-year career in journalism, but this collection (timed to mark the centennial of Steinbeck's birth) demonstrates that the author was a major journalistic voice in the mid-20th century. Of course, the pieces vary in quality: Steinbeck's travel writing, personal recollections and political journalism are more entertaining than his essays on craft or dated dispatches from war zones, and one questions why the editors, both Steinbeck scholars, chose certain brief reports. Still, Steinbeck's humor shines through in a number of fine essays, especially in one about a visit to his Sag Harbor cottage with two teenage sons, and another on his battles (in print) with a Communist newspaper in Italy. Three reports on the plight of California's migrant workers—written in the mid-1930s before Steinbeck had finished
Reviewed on: 01/07/2002
Genre: Nonfiction
Open Ebook - 448 pages - 978-1-4362-9470-6
Peanut Press/Palm Reader - 448 pages - 978-1-4362-9643-4